4.7 Article

Caspase-8 deficiency in epidermal keratinocytes triggers an inflammatory skin disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 206, Issue 10, Pages 2161-2177

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20090616

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Funding

  1. Ares Trading SA (Switzerland)
  2. Flight Attendant Medical Research Institute
  3. Kekst Family Center for Medical Genetics
  4. Shapell Family Center for Genetic Disorders Research at The Weizmann Institute of Science

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Expression of enzymatically inactive caspase-8, or deletion of caspase-8 from basal epidermal keratinocytes, triggers chronic skin inflammation in mice. Unlike similar inflammation resulting from arrest of nuclear factor. B activation in the epidermal cells, the effect induced by caspase-8 deficiency did not depend on TNF, IL-1, dermal macrophage function, or expression of the toll-like receptor adapter proteins MyD88 or TRIF. Both interferon regulatory factor (IRF) 3 and TANK-binding kinase were constitutively phosphorylated in the caspase-8-deficient epidermis, and knockdown of IRF3 in the epidermis-derived cells from these mice abolished the expression of up-regulated genes. Temporal and spatial analyses of the alterations in gene expression that result from caspase-8 deficiency reveal that the changes are initiated before birth, around the time that cornification develops, and occur mainly in the suprabasal layer. Finally, we found that caspase-8-deficient keratinocytes display an enhanced response to gene activation by transfected DNA. Our findings suggest that an enhanced response to endogenous activators of IRF3 in the epidermis, presumably generated in association with keratinocyte differentiation, contributes to the skin inflammatory process triggered by caspase-8 deficiency.

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